
After a decade in the property market, most investors don’t regret buying property—they regret how they bought, when they sold, or what they ignored. Singapore’s real estate market rewards patience and strategy, but it also exposes emotional or rushed decisions over time.
Looking at developments like Thomson Reserve and Amberwood at Holland helps highlight common long-term mistakes investors only realize years later.
1. Buying Based on Hype Instead of Fundamentals
One of the biggest regrets is entering a project during peak excitement without analyzing long-term value.
- Lifestyle buzz can inflate expectations
- Marketing momentum can distort pricing
- Short-term demand can mislead investors
Areas like Amberwood at Holland often attract strong attention due to lifestyle appeal, but investors later realize that hype does not always equal sustained growth.
2. Ignoring Tenant Profile Stability
Many investors focus only on rental yield, not tenant stability.
Over time, they realize:
- High turnover increases costs
- Vacancy gaps reduce returns
- Constant tenant searching is inefficient
Thomson Reserve tends to attract more stable, long-term tenants, which many investors later appreciate after experiencing high turnover elsewhere.
3. Overestimating Short-Term Capital Gains
A common regret is expecting fast appreciation.
In reality:
- Property cycles move slowly
- Policy changes can delay growth
- Gains often compound over time instead of spiking quickly
Investors in both Thomson Reserve and Amberwood at Holland often learn that patience matters more than timing perfection.
4. Selling Too Early
Many investors exit too soon after seeing modest gains.
Later, they realize:
- The biggest appreciation often happens in later cycles
- Holding longer could have doubled returns
- Emotional selling limits long-term wealth building
This is especially common in stable properties like Thomson Reserve, where slow and steady growth rewards long holding periods.
5. Overpaying During Peak Demand
Entering the market during peak sentiment often leads to long-term underperformance.
This happens when:
- Buyers compete aggressively
- Prices are driven by urgency
- Emotional decision-making dominates
Even strong locations like Amberwood at Holland can become overpriced temporarily during high-demand cycles.
6. Underestimating Holding Costs
Many investors only calculate purchase price and rental income.
Later, they realize additional costs include:
- Maintenance fees
- Interest rate increases
- Renovation cycles
- Vacancy periods
These costs significantly impact net returns over 10 years.
7. Choosing the Wrong Property Type for Strategy
Mismatch between strategy and property type is a major regret.
Examples:
- Buying a high-turnover lifestyle unit for long-term stability
- Choosing a quiet residential unit for aggressive flipping
- Ignoring target tenant alignment
Thomson Reserve suits stability-focused strategies, while Amberwood at Holland suits lifestyle-driven or rental-focused strategies.
8. Ignoring Future Supply Competition
Investors often overlook future nearby launches.
Over time, they realize:
- New supply affects pricing power
- Older units may face competition
- Rental demand gets redistributed
This is why location evolution matters as much as current demand.
9. Not Diversifying Property Strategy
Many investors put all their capital into one type of property.
Later, they realize:
- Market cycles affect different segments differently
- Balanced portfolios reduce risk
- Lifestyle and residential properties behave differently
Combining assets like Thomson Reserve (stable residential) and Amberwood at Holland (lifestyle-driven) would have reduced volatility.
10. Failing to Plan an Exit Strategy Early
The biggest long-term regret is not planning when to exit.
Without a clear exit plan:
- Investors miss peak cycles
- Emotional attachment delays selling
- Profit-taking becomes inconsistent
A structured plan helps maximize returns regardless of market timing.
Final Thoughts
After 10 years, successful investors don’t necessarily have perfect timing—they have better discipline. Most regrets in Singapore property investing come from emotional decisions, not lack of opportunity.
Thomson Reserve and Amberwood at Holland highlight two different investment journeys: one focused on stability and long-term holding, the other on lifestyle-driven demand and cyclical movement.
The lesson is simple: property wealth is built not just by choosing the right project, but by avoiding the wrong decisions over time.
